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#41 |
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Number of medals is a testament to dominance. Being able to win in all of those events is extremely difficult. The physical and emotional drain a competitor undergoes from having to compete in 8 events against people who are competing in 2-3 events can be overwhelming. |
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#43 |
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Dominant fashion, eh? He wasn't one of the fastest times in the relay(s). |
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#44 |
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#45 |
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#46 |
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#47 |
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Dominant is Lezak's time of 46.06 in the relay after Phelps swam a 47.51. |
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#48 |
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#49 |
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If you take away the 16 Total medals he has won (2 away from this: But if Phelps can win two medals this year he’ll tie gymnast Larisa Latynina as the most decorated Olympic Athlete. Latynina, who helped the Soviet Union assert its dominance in female gymnastics during the 1960s, earned 18 medals (9 gold, 5 silver, 4 bronze). Her record has stood since 1964.
Read more at http://www.inquisitr.com/260832/most-olympic-medals-michael-phelps-could-break-larisa-latyninas-record-at-2012-london-olympics/#dQe4lcSiT813wxRs.99), then yes he is overrated. |
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#50 |
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Dominant is Lezak's time of 46.06 in the relay after Phelps swam a 47.51. What a fucking slouch. Only set the American record in that one. Not even a world record. |
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#51 |
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#52 |
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that's a terrible counterpoint. But of course, everyone had those suits, so Phelps wasn't at an advantage. I'm just saying -- I wouldn't rely on the fact that Phelps and his teammates set world records as an indication of dominance. I think the fact that he won gold in 8 events is enough to argue he was dominant. |
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#53 |
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Underlying all of that is -- this is the Olympics and one minor error and you may not even medal in an event. This is the dumbest argument ever. He certainly may not be the greatest Olympian ever, but under no circumstances can the person with the most gold medals ever in the Olympics be overrated. |
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#54 |
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Impressive, yes.. of course. Yeah, in swimming everyone gets a medal just for showing up. you talk about swimmers racking up all kinds of medals like the shit happens all the time. the medal record that phelps beat was almost a 40 year old record at the time. |
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#55 |
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Lezak did swim out of his mind, but you realize Phelps 47.51 is (or at least was at the time) and American record (because only the first leg can count for records since it comes with the standing start)? Better to compare Phelps to the other guys in the pool in that race. 8 guys competed between France and USA: Jason Lezak (46.06) Frédérick Bousquet (46.63) Alain Bernard (46.73) Fabien Gilot (47.05) Garrett Weber-Gale (47.02) Michael Phelps (47.51) Cullen Jones (47.65) Amaury Leveaux (47.91) |
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#57 |
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#58 |
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As CPL pointed out, the "records" weren't too meaningful. They were being broken every day in Beijing. |
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#60 |
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As CPL pointed out, the "records" weren't too meaningful. They were being broken every day in Beijing. |
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